The Quilt that Jack Built; How He Won the Bicycle  by Annie Fellows Johnston
page 30 of 37 (81%)
page 30 of 37 (81%)
|  |  | 
|  | 
			Chicky, my son, if you'll promise to be good." "I say, Todd," said Chicky, giving him a quizzical glance, "I'd give a doughnut to know what motto you and Ab chose." Todd grinned. "You won't have much longer to wait," he said. "Time is nearly up, and we'll know our fate in another ten days." The last week in August, the three men whom the boys had selected to decide their case met in Judge Parker's office. "If you want my opinion," said the grocer, when he was called upon, "I think Ab Morgan has worked the hardest for this prize. He has proved the truth of his motto beyond a doubt, for he has made a success of his garden, and has never slacked up a day. He has made a nice little pile of money, too, and I would recommend him to any business man in this town as an example of diligence. I'll be glad to have him clerk for me any time he gets ready to come." "I think that little Todd Walters has made the best choice," said the druggist. "You see, he has been selling fly-paper for me all summer on commission, and I've had a chance to see the inner workings. People are always coming to me with some pleasant thing to say about him. He's certainly won the 'loving favour' of all he's had anything to do with, whether they were his customers or not, and the good name he has made for himself will stick to him all his life. "He had a lemonade stand at the baseball game last week, and I heard Doctor Streeter say to a friend: 'Come on, Bill, let's go over and get a glass,--patronize the little fellow.' The man said, 'No, thank you, |  | 


 
